Ad
related to: case foundation louisville
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Echoing the foundation's deep involvement in volunteering and civic engagement, CEO Jean Case also serves as chair of the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation, [4] which is working to expand business employees' pro bono service to nonprofit organizations in need of those services. [5]
The Stoll kidnapping was a 1934 crime in Louisville, Kentucky that made the front page of national newspapers and magazines as an FBI investigation under the Federal Kidnapping Act. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 2016, Louisville Magazine writer Brian Hunt called the Stoll kidnapping "Louisville's crime of the century."
The "Trinity murders" (so named for the high school attended by the victims) occurred in Louisville, Kentucky, on September 29, 1984, when Victor Dewayne Taylor and George Ellis Wade kidnapped and murdered two 17-year-old Trinity High School students, Scott Christopher Nelson and Richard David Stephenson. Taylor was sentenced to death, and Wade ...
Breonna Taylor (June 5, 1993 – March 13, 2020) was an African-American woman who was shot and killed while unarmed in her Louisville, Kentucky home by three police officers who entered under the auspices of a "no-knock" search warrant.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Louisville, Kentucky, struck an agreement with the U.S. Justice Department on Thursday to reform its police department after an investigation prompted by the 2020 killing of ...
The foundation, which he had created in 1943, has donated to local and state causes over the years, and remains active as of 2020. The current active President and CEO of the foundation as of 2020 is local Louisville resident, Mason Bennett Rummel. [7] The foundation claims $462,816,066 in donations through 2,700 grants so far.
Jack Harlow Launches Foundation to ‘Reinvest, Uplift and Support’ Community Organizations in His Louisville, Kentucky Hometown Jem Aswad May 3, 2023 at 3:43 PM
On December 4, 2008, Louisville Metro Police announced a major break in the disappearance case of Ann Gotlib. A spokesperson for the LMPD, commenting on new developments in the case, suggested that it was the police's belief that convicted felon and former veterinarian Gregory Oakley Jr. — who had been a suspect since the initial disappearance in 1983 — had possibly been responsible for ...